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A68194 The displaying of the Protestantes, [and] sondry their practises, with a description of diuers their abuses of late frequented Newly imprinted agayne, and augmented, with a table in the ende, of all suche matter as is specially contained within this volume. Made by Myles Huggarde seruant to the Quenes maiestie. Huggarde, Miles. 1556 (1556) STC 13558; ESTC S118795 74,272 276

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power that no kynde of mannes woorkes after faith receiued can helpe him to be made the sonne of God But this their saying will not stande with S. Iohns wordes For he sayth that to as many as receiued him and beleued in his holy name too suche people so receiuing so beleuing him he gaue to them power to be made the sōnes of god Then if he gaue too them power to be made the sonnes God there be workes wrought after faythe so receiued wherby thei haue power in the merites of Christe to be made the sonnes of God And thus by fayth and not by faythe onely haue they this power too woorke the will of God whiche workes helpeth a man to iustificatiō as saint Iames affirmeth saying What auaileth it my brethren though a man saie he hath faith if he haue no dedes cā faith saue him How chaunceth it then that the protestantes with theyr onely faith beareth such swynge glorie so in the scriptures sithe saint Iames so manifestly saith that withoute workes a man can not be saued If a brother or a syster sayeth he be naked or destitute of daily fode and one of you saieth vnto them God sende you warmnes and fode notwithstāding you geue thē not those thinges nedefull to the bodye what shal it helpe ▪ Euen so faith without workes is dead in it selfe He also saieth in another place that Abraham and Raab wer iustified by workes and cōcludeth saying that of dedes not of fayth only a man is iustified What more plainer wordes can be wished for to proue that workes auayle too iustification But what shall we saie vnto you then o ye pestilent protestantes whiche with youre sugred talke and swete woordes haue begiled the poore people in suche sorte that thei beleue verely they shal be saued in a beleuing faith without any workes at al What shall we say vnto you O ye betrayers of your countreye for this your lastinious preaching of onely fayeth too exclude good workes the chief state wherfore we were borne O wicked men worse then the deuel your father of whose progeny ye are lyneally descended What ment you herein to robbe God of his glory and to bereue from his poore membres their reliefe and fode What glorious similitudes haue you vsed in these your practises to begile the poore men Hope in the bloud of Christe truste in his redemption he is our satisfaction his death only can iustifie vs and suche like ye were wont to vse to instil a zeale to the hartes of your herers the rather to credite your doctrine These be swete wordes doubtles and mete to be hadde in price of all men But howe as ye meane thē God forbidde I may aswell saye Doest thou beleue in the bloude of Christe Then do what thou liste his death is sufficient But let euery catholike man beware of this doctrine for it is a lying doctryne a deceitfull argument and a doctrine of deuels We knowe that our iustification procedeth of God only by the passiō of his derebeloued sōne Iesus Christe But this his passion beyng not to vs applied by folowing his steppes so farre as it lieth in our powers in doynge the dedes of charitie the same to vs is not auailable For although his death is sufficient enough to attaine to iustification yet if in the merites of the same we do not worke euerye man according to his vocation the same to vs yeldeth no comfort Saint Paule therefore sayeth that the hearers of the lawe are not iuste but the doers of the same shal be iustified Therfore accordyng to the saying of Saint Iohn let no man seduce you for he that doeth righteousnes is iustified The scriptures are full of these exhortacions in doing the woorkes of iustice the rather by Christ not by faith only to attayne to saluacion Therefore these odible perswasions of the protestantes touching this opinion ought too be from the harte of man clerely repelled And as Liuie rehersing the oracion of Menippus Embassadour to Antiochus spokē to the Romaines saieth that faire perswasions in the beginning seme pleasant but in th ēde they be sorrowfull euen soo the vnhappie sermons more vnhappy bokes made by these hedgecreping protestantes semed at the first show pleasant stuffe but thendes therof god wote are moste lamentable For besides the ill opinions beaten into the heades of the careles multitude libertie of lyfe hathe borne suche swynge that good life bereth no rule Libertie by meanes of these ruffians hath takē such holde fast that it hath dashed good life quite out of coūtenance Libertie is rooted so in mannes harte that to moste mē it is frākely retayned Libertie a roister hath such interteignemēt that of many he receyueth a double welcome Libertie a parasite at euery mannes borde is choked with the fare of many daintie dishes Thus moste sortes of men glad too haue libertie care not what haste they make to the deuell O deuelysh libertie I wold to GOD Germany might haue kepte the styll so Englande had neuer bene troubled with the. I would to God thou haddest had all our Englyshe bier too drynke dronke with Hance and Yacob in Strasborowe vpon condiciō London had neuer reteyned the. I would to God thou haddest remayned in Switherlande a conquerour so that thou haddest neuer had conquest in Englande For sythe thy arriuall hether many poore men by thy vngracious marchaundise are vndoone Many a good Englyshe man at the first glad to entertaygne the for curtesie as a straunger wold now be rydde of their gueste but they cannot But I truste shortly to see the bankeroute and glad to flye the realme I heare saye thy poore companions nowe in Geneua Emden Frieslande Strasborough and other places of Gernye ●urse the time that euer they knewe the and thy haunte if credite may be geuen to the coiners frō thence Whose miserie is such that a chamber as bygge as a Swynecotte is of as good rente as the best marchauntes house in Londō And no maruaile though our cornerkreapers be so frendely welcomed paying soe well for their welcome I heard saye of one in Grauesende Barge belyke some pilgryme of Goddes churche that the poore menne of that coūtrey which in dede were very poore before the repayre of our englishmen thether are now become iolye fellowes And by what meanes thinke you By lettyng out their cotages in the townes to our countreymē Who because they be glad to haue thē vse no debating of the matter as we do but bidde them aske and haue And they strayning small curtesie are contented too take their offer O lamētable cases of a sorte of thurstie soules whiche for the thurst of the lordes worde as they cal it do thurst after their owne destruction The Lordes woorde was taught here establyshed longe before your dayes and the hole lāde beleued therin And wil you deuise a new lordes worde to cole your dronken stomakes Hath Germany a